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Back in Bidness

I forgot I had this blog, and then I decided I wanted
to start blogging my experiences as a pre-med student and then I
remembered THIS blog. So I'm back and bloggier than ever.

I have always been a fan of blogging/blogs/bloggers
specifically those of the pre-medicine/ medicine variety. it's always so
lovely to read blogs of lady MDs who have made it through med school
and residency or med-school babes. But I haven't come across a lot of
PRE-med blogs or even blogs that have posts from the pre-med stage. I
love reading advice about how to pick the perfect specialty, or tips for
residency matches, but I would just love to have anything about the
nature of being a pre-med student. So this is where I come in

I'm not an expert and I don't have this all figured
out, I am just a pre-med student posting about my journey through
undergrad in hopes that some other pre-meds out there can look to my
blog for advice and we can get through some of the most stressful years
of our schooling together.

So this is me:

I'm Katie Franks and I grew up in Centennial, Colorado.
It's about 30 minutes from Denver and about 30 minutes from the
mountains, which proved to be a very perfect place for a city-loving,
mountain-hiking kind of gal.

My undergrad experience has been a bit rocky so far.
I've been to 4 different school and tried out 4 different majors. I am
absolutely the type of person that needs to try on several pairs of
pants before I can just choose one. Each of the schools I went to before
didn't feel right until now. I am currently finishing my third year at
University of Colorado in Boulder. I love it. It's close to home, it's a
beautiful campus, but more importantly the opportunities I've seen,
blow my mind. From research, to clubs, to on-campus EMTs, this school
has everything. (also check out this view....)

I'm currently an MCDB major, (which is Molecular Cellular and Developmental biology) with a global health minor. I'm also a big big fan
of creative writing which is another reason I wanted to create this
blog, to use as an outlet for my writing needs, because you don't get to
do a lot of fluffy writing in a pre-med major.I am also a TA in a CURE laboratory on campus. CURE
stands for Cumulative Undergraduate Research Experience and is the BEST
thing that's happened to me. Instead of taking a regular gen bio lab
where you do everything out of a cook book and you can find all of the
answers online if you wanted to (but who wants to?), you get to do REAL
LIFE research in a REAL LIFE laboratory for REAL LIFE researchers. When I
was in the class I worked under Dr. Corrie Detweiler doing antibiotic resistance research, and now I'm the TA for the lab working under Dr.
Tin Tin Su doing cancer research. Undergrads are capable of doing great
things, never forget that.

I'm trying my hardest, and working even harder. I'm not sure on a lot of
things, but what I do know is that with every action there is a
purpose, once you find your purpose, those actions become a lot easier
to do.
So welcome, and I hope you think I'm as funny, witty and smart as I do.
hip, happenin, and happy every DARN day.

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